Don Lemon Looks At Black Men in the Age of Obama

CNN Anchor Don Lemon reflects on the first time he heard the name Barack Obama, what he thinks of the president's success and how that success has impacted our community.

His profile, however, rose very quickly after his surprising landslide primary victory in 2004. Truth be told, before then, many African-Americans in Chicago begrudged him for having the audacity to run against incumbent and beloved U.S. Representative Bobby Rush in 2000. He lost that race. His profile, however, rose very quickly after his surprising landslide primary victory in 2004.

When people ask me why I'm amazed at what Barack Obama has accomplished, I tell them it's not because of what most of America and the world sees and knows of his history. It's because I witnessed what I can only describe as a bizarre turn of events that thrust him into position to even become a U.S. senator. The early Democratic front-runner imploded because of a divorce scandal. Another Democrat ran out of money. Obama suddenly had a clear shot. But, he faced a formidable and very wealthy ivy-league, Republican opponent. And only in a Hollywood-like plot twist, he too dropped out because of a divorce scandal. And if all that wasn't enough, the keynote address at the Democratic National Convention one month later completely set him up to seal the deal.

It's at this point in Barack Obama's story where the masses began to take notice. Consider this, the very same story repeating itself on the national stage during Obama's run for the presidency. The characters, the challenges, the scandals have different names, but the storyline and the plot are the same. And the moral of the entire thing is that it's really not about Barack Obama the man. It's about what he represents for all of us--that anything is possible, even for Black men in the age of President Obama.